Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jim Mussared
5fd042e7d1 all: Replace all uses of umodule in Python code.
Applies to drivers/examples/extmod/port-modules/tools.

This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2023-06-08 17:54:24 +10:00
Jim Mussared
f5f9edf645 all: Rename UMODULE to MODULE in preprocessor/Makefile vars.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2023-06-08 17:54:11 +10:00
Glenn Moloney
7fa322afb8 esp32,esp8266: Add support for the Espressif ESP-NOW protocol.
ESP-NOW is a proprietary wireless communication protocol which supports
connectionless communication between ESP32 and ESP8266 devices, using
vendor specific WiFi frames.  This commit adds support for this protocol
through a new `espnow` module.

This commit builds on original work done by @nickzoic, @shawwwn and with
contributions from @zoland.  Features include:
- Use of (extended) ring buffers in py/ringbuf.[ch] for robust IO.
- Signal strength (RSSI) monitoring.
- Core support in `_espnow` C module, extended by `espnow.py` module.
- Asyncio support via `aioespnow.py` module (separate to this commit).
- Docs provided at `docs/library/espnow.rst`.

Methods available in espnow.ESPNow class are:
- active(True/False)
- config(): set rx buffer size, read timeout and tx rate
- recv()/irecv()/recvinto() to read incoming messages from peers
- send() to send messages to peer devices
- any() to test if a message is ready to read
- irq() to set callback for received messages
- stats() returns transfer stats:
    (tx_pkts, tx_pkt_responses, tx_failures, rx_pkts, lost_rx_pkts)
- add_peer(mac, ...) registers a peer before sending messages
- get_peer(mac) returns peer info: (mac, lmk, channel, ifidx, encrypt)
- mod_peer(mac, ...) changes peer info parameters
- get_peers() returns all peer info tuples
- peers_table supports RSSI signal monitoring for received messages:
    {peer1: [rssi, time_ms], peer2: [rssi, time_ms], ...}

ESP8266 is a pared down version of the ESP32 ESPNow support due to code
size restrictions and differences in the low-level API.  See docs for
details.

Also included is a test suite in tests/multi_espnow.  This tests basic
espnow data transfer, multiple transfers, various message sizes, encrypted
messages (pmk and lmk), and asyncio support.

Initial work is from https://github.com/micropython/micropython/pull/4115.
Initial import of code is from:
https://github.com/nickzoic/micropython/tree/espnow-4115.
2023-05-01 16:47:21 +10:00
Damien George
9f8087b448 esp8266/boards: Enable reverse-special-methods on GENERIC board.
It increases the firmware size by 292 bytes.

Addresses issue #5897.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2022-07-08 23:06:16 +10:00
Damien George
ad7b98c829 esp8266/mpconfigport: Switch to ROM feature level configuration.
This is a no-op in terms of board configuration.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2022-06-23 13:07:39 +10:00
Mike Causer
7f14344428 ports: Add images, features and urls to board.json. 2021-10-28 15:25:38 +11:00
Jim Mussared
e359b077dd ports: Add board.json for all boards.
This will be used by https://micropython.org/download/ to generate the
full listing of boards and firmware files.

Optionally supports a board.md for additional customisation of the
download page, as well as deploy.md for flashing instructions.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2021-10-27 14:04:53 +11:00
Rafael Römhild
8f3167a962 esp8266/boards: Allow configuring btree/FAT/LFS2 support when building.
Prior to e0905e85a7 it was possible to
disable btree support on build.  This patch allows to configure btree
support on make again and also the two new introduced options for FAT and
LFS2 filesystems.
2020-05-14 22:16:01 +10:00
Damien George
e0905e85a7 esp8266: Change from FAT to littlefs v2 as default filesystem.
This commit changes the esp8266 boards to use littlefs v2 as the
filesystem, rather than FAT.  Since the esp8266 doesn't expose the
filesystem to the PC over USB there's no strong reason to keep it as FAT.
Littlefs is smaller in code size, is more efficient in use of flash to
store data, is resilient over power failure, and using it saves about 4k of
heap RAM, which can now be used for other things.

This is a backwards incompatible change because all existing esp8266 boards
will need to update their filesystem after installing new firmware (eg
backup old files, install firmware, restore files to new filesystem).

As part of this commit the memory layout of the default board (GENERIC) has
changed.  It now allocates all 1M of memory-mapped flash to the firmware,
so the filesystem area starts at the 2M point.  This is done to allow more
frozen bytecode to be stored in the 1M of memory-mapped flash.  This
requires an esp8266 module with 2M or more of flash to work, so a new board
called GENERIC_1M is added which has the old memory-mapping (but still
changed to use littlefs for the filesystem).

In summary there are now 3 esp8266 board definitions:
- GENERIC_512K: for 512k modules, doesn't have a filesystem.
- GENERIC_1M: for 1M modules, 572k for firmware+frozen code, 396k for
  filesystem (littlefs).
- GENERIC: for 2M (or greater) modules, 968k for firmware+frozen code,
  1M+ for filesystem (littlefs), FAT driver also included in firmware for
  use on, eg, external SD cards.
2020-04-04 16:30:36 +11:00